pam_cracklib8Linux-PAM Manualpam_cracklibPAM module to check the password against dictionary wordspam_cracklib.so...DESCRIPTION
This module can be plugged into the password stack of
a given application to provide some plug-in strength-checking for passwords.
The action of this module is to prompt the user for a password and
check its strength against a system dictionary and a set of rules for
identifying poor choices.
The first action is to prompt for a single password, check its
strength and then, if it is considered strong, prompt for the password
a second time (to verify that it was typed correctly on the first
occasion). All being well, the password is passed on to subsequent
modules to be installed as the new authentication token.
The strength checks works in the following manner: at first the
Cracklib routine is called to check if the password
is part of a dictionary; if this is not the case an additional set of
strength checks is done. These checks are:
Palindrome
Is the new password a palindrome of the old one?
Case Change Only
Is the new password the the old one with only a change of case?
Similar
Is the new password too much like the old one?
This is primarily controlled by one argument,
which is a number of characters
that if different between the old and new are enough to accept
the new password, this defaults to 10 or 1/2 the size of the
new password whichever is smaller.
To avoid the lockup associated with trying to change a long and
complicated password, is available.
This argument can be used to specify the minimum length a new
password needs to be before the value is
ignored. The default value for is 23.
Simple
Is the new password too small?
This is controlled by 5 arguments ,
, ,
, and . See the section
on the arguments for the details of how these work and there defaults.
Rotated
Is the new password a rotated version of the old password?
Already used
Was the password used in the past? Previously used passwords
are to be found in /etc/security/opasswd.
This module with no arguments will work well for standard unix
password encryption. With md5 encryption, passwords can be longer
than 8 characters and the default settings for this module can make it
hard for the user to choose a satisfactory new password. Notably, the
requirement that the new password contain no more than 1/2 of the
characters in the old password becomes a non-trivial constraint. For
example, an old password of the form "the quick brown fox jumped over
the lazy dogs" would be difficult to change... In addition, the
default action is to allow passwords as small as 5 characters in
length. For a md5 systems it can be a good idea to increase the
required minimum size of a password. One can then allow more credit
for different kinds of characters but accept that the new password may
share most of these characters with the old password.
OPTIONS
This option makes the module write information to
syslog3
indicating the behavior of the module (this option does
not write password information to the log file).
The default action is for the module to use the
following prompts when requesting passwords:
"New UNIX password: " and "Retype UNIX password: ".
The default word UNIX can
be replaced with this option.
Prompt user at most N times
before returning with error. The default is
1
This argument will change the default of
5 for the number of characters in
the new password that must not be present in the old
password. In addition, if 1/2 of the characters in the
new password are different then the new password will
be accepted anyway.
How many characters should the password have before
difok will be ignored. The default is
23.
The minimum acceptable size for the new password (plus
one if credits are not disabled which is the default).
In addition to the number of characters in the new password,
credit (of +1 in length) is given for each different kind
of character (other,
upper, lower and
digit). The default for this parameter
is 9 which is good for a old style UNIX
password all of the same type of character but may be too low
to exploit the added security of a md5 system. Note that
there is a pair of length limits in
Cracklib itself, a "way too short" limit
of 4 which is hard coded in and a defined limit (6) that will
be checked without reference to .
If you want to allow passwords as short as 5 characters you
should not use this module.
(N >= 0) This is the maximum credit for having digits in
the new password. If you have less than or
N
digits, each digit will count +1 towards meeting the current
value. The default for
is 1 which is the recommended
value for less than 10.
(N < 0) This is the minimum number of digits that must
be met for a new password.
(N >= 0) This is the maximum credit for having upper
case letters in the new password. If you have less than
or N upper case letters each
letter will count +1 towards meeting the current
value. The default for
is 1 which
is the recommended value for less
than 10.
(N < 0) This is the minimum number of upper
case letters that must be met for a new password.
(N >= 0) This is the maximum credit for having
lower case letters in the new password. If you have
less than or N lower case
letters, each letter will count +1 towards meeting the
current value. The default for
is 1 which is the recommended
value for less than 10.
(N < 0) This is the minimum number of lower
case letters that must be met for a new password.
(N >= 0) This is the maximum credit for having other
characters in the new password. If you have less than or
N other characters, each
character will count +1 towards meeting the current
value. The default for
is 1 which is the recommended
value for less than 10.
(N < 0) This is the minimum number of other
characters that must be met for a new password.
The minimum number of required classes of characters for
the new password. The default number is zero. The four
classes are digits, upper and lower letters and other
characters.
The difference to the check is
that a specific class if of characters is not required.
Instead N out of four of the
classes are required.
This argument is used to force the
module to not prompt the user for a new password but use
the one provided by the previously stacked
password module.
Path to the cracklib dictionaries.
MODULE TYPES PROVIDED
Only the module type is provided.
RETURN VALUESPAM_SUCCESS
The new password passes all checks.
PAM_AUTHTOK_ERR
No new password was entered,
the username could not be determined or the new
password fails the strength checks.
PAM_AUTHTOK_RECOVERY_ERR
The old password was not supplied by a previous stacked
module or got not requested from the user.
The first error can happen if
is specified.
PAM_SERVICE_ERR
A internal error occured.
EXAMPLES
For an example of the use of this module, we show how it may be
stacked with the password component of
pam_unix8
#
# These lines stack two password type modules. In this example the
# user is given 3 opportunities to enter a strong password. The
# "use_authtok" argument ensures that the pam_unix module does not
# prompt for a password, but instead uses the one provided by
# pam_cracklib.
#
passwd password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3
passwd password required pam_unix.so use_authtok
Another example (in the /etc/pam.d/passwd format)
is for the case that you want to use md5 password encryption:
#%PAM-1.0
#
# These lines allow a md5 systems to support passwords of at least 14
# bytes with extra credit of 2 for digits and 2 for others the new
# password must have at least three bytes that are not present in the
# old password
#
password required pam_cracklib.so \
difok=3 minlen=15 dcredit= 2 ocredit=2
password required pam_unix.so use_authtok nullok md5
And here is another example in case you don't want to use credits:
#%PAM-1.0
#
# These lines require the user to select a password with a minimum
# length of 8 and with at least 1 digit number, 1 upper case letter,
# and 1 other character
#
password required pam_cracklib.so \
dcredit=-1 ucredit=-1 ocredit=-1 lcredit=0 minlen=8
password required pam_unix.so use_authtok nullok md5
SEE ALSOpam.conf5,
pam.d5,
pam8AUTHOR
pam_cracklib was written by Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>